bigfan wrote:
Its amazing how Govt finds money for stadiums, but teachers need to strike for 1 % raises.
Cheaper to keep them! Keeping smart people from moving to Minnesota and Illinois, though, less of a concern.
http://www.jsonline.com/news/opinion/st ... 48891.htmlQuote:
In recent years, Wisconsin has seen a large exodus of college graduates seeking opportunities in other states. According to a study by University of Wisconsin-Madison professor Morris Davis, on average the state lost roughly 14,000 college graduates per year between 2008 and 2012. Almost half of those who left were young adults between the ages of 21 and 24 who recently obtained degrees. This loss of talent comes with consequences. This "brain drain" stunts entrepreneurial efforts, shrinks the tax base and ultimately hinders the state's overall ability to innovate and grow economically.
There is extensive evidence establishing that a city or state's future economic prosperity is directly tied to its population of young, educated workers. In other words, it is crucial to retain the state's best and brightest after graduation in order to maintain robust economic progress. This is especially true given that by 2020, 62% of jobs in Wisconsin will require a postsecondary degree, as reported by the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce.
What makes our "brain drain" even more troubling is that currently, thousands of unfilled jobs exist in the state because candidates lack the necessary education and/or skill set. As some job sectors decline, there has been a rapid uptick of available jobs in the technology industry and other skilled trade areas.
A Republican legislator wrote this.
I guess Wisconsin and Michigan send their twentysomethings to Chicago, Chicago sends its own to Los Angeles and New York, New York sends its own to Florida, and then Florida's natives blow themselves up with fireworks or get eaten by alligators. Circle of life.
_________________
Molly Lambert wrote:
The future holds the possibility to be great or terrible, and since it has not yet occurred it remains simultaneously both.